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Skeletal System. Axial Skeleton. 80 bones. Appendicular Skeleton. 126 bones. Bony composition. Endochondral Ossification. Diaphysis: refers to the shaft portion of the long bones. Primary site of ossification. Epiphysis: expanded end portion and it’s the secondary site of ossification.
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Axial Skeleton • 80 bones
Appendicular Skeleton • 126 bones
Endochondral Ossification Diaphysis: refers to the shaft portion of the long bones. Primary site of ossification. Epiphysis: expanded end portion and it’s the secondary site of ossification. Metaphysis: growth zone between the epiphysis and diaphysis.
Osteogenesis Imperfecta • Often called brittle bone disease • Hereditary or congenital • Serious disease • Bone cortex is thin and porous, and trabeculae are thin, delicate and widely separated • X-ray demonstrates various fractures in various stages of healing and general decrease in bone mass
Achondroplasia • Most common inherited disorder of the skeletal system • Results in bone deformity & dwarfism • Normal trunk size & shortened extremities • Usually no more than 4ft tall • Clinical manifestation: • Lumbar lordosis, • bowed legs, • bulky forehead with hypoplasia • narrowing of foramen magnum causing neural compression
Osteopetrosis • Bones are abnormally heavy and compact but brittle • All bones are affected by most changes occur in long bones of extremities, vertebrae, pelvis and base of skull • X-rays demonstrate increase in thickness and density of bony cortex. • Increase in the # and size of trabeculae, reduction of the marrow space
Scoliosis • Lateral curvature of the spine • Does not usually become visible until adolescents • Affects girl more
Transitional VertebraOften called Lumbar Ribs • Takes on characteristics of both vertebrae on each side of a major division of the spine • 1st lumbar may have a rib • At C7 there may be a cervical rib
Anencephaly • Congenital abnormality • Brain and cranial vault do not form • Results in death shortly after birth • Can be diagnosed with US before they are born
Rheumatoid Arthritis • Chronic autoimmune that may fluctuate in severity • Overgrowth of the synovial tissues • X-ray shows soft tissue swelling & osteoporosis of affected bone. Bone erosion & decalcification
Osteoarthritis • Most common form of arthritis • Articular cartilage degenerates & gradually is worn away exposing underlying bone • Ostephytes & bone spurs are on x-rays
Osteomyelitis • Infection of the bone & bone marrow • Symptoms & signs include fever, heat in the affected area, & dull pain • X-rays demonstrate loss of bone calcium and soft tissue swelling
Ankylosing Spondylitis • Progressive form of arthritis affecting the spine • X-ray shows bilateral narrowing & fuzziness of the SI joints • Calcification of the bones of the spine with ossification of the vertebral ligaments
Gout • Is an inherited metabolic disorder in which excessive amounts of uric acid is produced & deposited in the joint and adjacent bone • Bone changes include erosion & overhanging edges
Spondylolisthesis • Slipping of the body of the vertebra • Symptoms are similar to those of a herniated disk
Osteochondroma • Benign bone tumor • Affects women more than men • Asymptomatic • Excessive bone growth • Cortex of osteochondroma blends in with normal bone and growth protrudes up & away from nearest joint
Osteosarcoma • Most common primary malignancy of the skeleton • Highly aggressive and most often occurs in the bone marrow • X-ray appears as a sunray or sunburst
Bone Cyst • Idiopathitic disease and is not a true neoplasm • Consists of numerous blood filled arterivenous communications • Most common treatment is surgical removal
MRI • Superior contrast resolution for soft tissue detail • Modality of choice for soft tissue tumor • Extremely useful in eval of joints • MRi detects a larger number of musculoskeletal subtleties with higher resolution imaging • Bone marrow imaging is better than nuc med scans for subtle abnormalities
CT • Can be performed quickly & noninvasively • Defines extent of fractures and dislocations • Superior to MRI for cortical bone and visualization of bony detail • Gives better bone detail than plain x-ray • Has been largely replaced by MRI for soft tissue
Nuclear Medicine • Has advantage over CT & MRI because it can scan the whole body at one time • Can show if an injury is old or new • Still the standard for examination of metastatic processes because it demonstrates metabolic reaction of bone to the disease process • Is more sensitive than comparative radiographic studies